Nadkor
21-04-2007, 18:48
(BBC News (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6579335.stm))
A senior Sunni politician has condemned a US military project to build a concrete wall around a Sunni enclave in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
US forces say the wall, which will separate Adhamiya from nearby Shia districts, aims to prevent sectarian violence between the two communities.
But Adnan al-Dulaimi, who heads the biggest Sunni bloc in parliament, says it will breed yet more strife.
Some Adhamiya residents have said the wall will make their district a prison.
Adhamiya lies on the mainly Shia Muslim east bank of the Tigris river and violence regularly flares between the enclave and nearby Shia areas.
Construction of the 5km (three-mile) concrete wall began on 10 April and the US military says it hopes to complete the project by the end of the month.
Once the 3.6m (12 ft) wall is finished, people will enter and leave Adhamiya through a small number of checkpoints guarded by US and Iraqi forces.
The US military says the barrier is the centrepiece of its strategy to end sectarian violence in the area but insists there are no plans to divide up the whole city into gated communities.
Senior Sunni cleric Adnan al-Dulaimi, who leads the General Council for the People of Iraq which is part of the Iraqi Accord Front, said the wall was a disaster.
Speaking to an Iraqi news agency, he said it would separate Adhamiya from the rest of Baghdad and help breed further violence.
'Maze of walls'
Some Adhamiya residents said the wall would harden the capital's already bitter sectarian divide.
"Erecting concrete walls between neighbourhoods is not a solution to the collapse in security and the rampant violence," housewife Um Haider told the AFP news agency.
"If so, Baghdadis would find themselves in a maze of high walls overnight, " she said.
"I resent the barrier. It will make Adhamiya a big prison," another resident, Mustafa, said.
Other residents also expressed alarm and said they had not been consulted before construction began.
"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Adhamiya," Ahmed al-Dulaimi told the Associated Press news agency.
"We are in our fourth year of occupation and we are seeing the number of blast walls increasing day after day," he said.
US and Iraqi troops have long built cement barriers around key locations in Baghdad and other cities to prevent attacks, especially suicide car bombings.
But no-one claims that such barriers and walls are protection in themselves, correspondents say.
Iraq has been in the grip of raging sectarian violence since the bombing of an important Shia shrine in Samarra in February 2006.
Now read this and compare*:
A senior Nationalist politician has condemned a British military project to build a concrete wall around a catholic enclave in the Northern Irish capital, Belfast.
UK forces say the wall, which will separate Short Strand from nearby protestant districts, aims to prevent sectarian violence between the two communities.
But Gerry Fitt, who heads the biggest catholic bloc in parliament, says it will breed yet more strife.
Some Short Strand residents have said the wall will make their district a prison.
Short Strand lies on the mainly protestant east bank of the Lagan river and violence regularly flares between the enclave and nearby protestant areas.
Construction of the 5km (three-mile) concrete wall began on 10 April and the British military says it hopes to complete the project by the end of the month.
Once the 3.6m (12 ft) wall is finished, people will enter and leave Short Strand through a small number of checkpoints guarded by UK forces.
The British army says the barrier is the centrepiece of its strategy to end sectarian violence in the area but insists there are no plans to divide up the whole city into gated communities.
Catholic Archbishop William Conway said the wall was a disaster.
Speaking to an Irish news agency, he said it would separate Short Strand from the rest of Belfast and help breed further violence.
'Maze of walls'
Some Short Strand residents said the wall would harden the capital's already bitter sectarian divide.
"Erecting concrete walls between neighbourhoods is not a solution to the collapse in security and the rampant violence," housewife Mary Taggart told the AFP news agency.
"If so, Belfast residents would find themselves in a maze of high walls overnight, " she said.
"I resent the barrier. It will make Short Strand a big prison," another resident, Kevin, said.
Other residents also expressed alarm and said they had not been consulted before construction began.
"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Short Strand," Sean Keevey told the Associated Press news agency.
"We are in our fourth year of violence and we are seeing the number of blast walls increasing day after day," he said.
British troops have long built cement barriers around key locations in Belfast and other cities to prevent attacks, especially car bombings.
But no-one claims that such barriers and walls are protection in themselves, correspondents say.
Northern Ireland has been in the grip of raging sectarian violence since the death of 13 civilians in a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1969.
And remember that the violence continued for 20 years, and Belfast did indeed become a "maze of walls" in some areas. Didn't help much.
Why can't they learn from the mistakes other people already made? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_line)
*some facts and years not particularly right, mainly to do with the year the Short Strand peace line was erected and its length, but the general point still stands
A senior Sunni politician has condemned a US military project to build a concrete wall around a Sunni enclave in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
US forces say the wall, which will separate Adhamiya from nearby Shia districts, aims to prevent sectarian violence between the two communities.
But Adnan al-Dulaimi, who heads the biggest Sunni bloc in parliament, says it will breed yet more strife.
Some Adhamiya residents have said the wall will make their district a prison.
Adhamiya lies on the mainly Shia Muslim east bank of the Tigris river and violence regularly flares between the enclave and nearby Shia areas.
Construction of the 5km (three-mile) concrete wall began on 10 April and the US military says it hopes to complete the project by the end of the month.
Once the 3.6m (12 ft) wall is finished, people will enter and leave Adhamiya through a small number of checkpoints guarded by US and Iraqi forces.
The US military says the barrier is the centrepiece of its strategy to end sectarian violence in the area but insists there are no plans to divide up the whole city into gated communities.
Senior Sunni cleric Adnan al-Dulaimi, who leads the General Council for the People of Iraq which is part of the Iraqi Accord Front, said the wall was a disaster.
Speaking to an Iraqi news agency, he said it would separate Adhamiya from the rest of Baghdad and help breed further violence.
'Maze of walls'
Some Adhamiya residents said the wall would harden the capital's already bitter sectarian divide.
"Erecting concrete walls between neighbourhoods is not a solution to the collapse in security and the rampant violence," housewife Um Haider told the AFP news agency.
"If so, Baghdadis would find themselves in a maze of high walls overnight, " she said.
"I resent the barrier. It will make Adhamiya a big prison," another resident, Mustafa, said.
Other residents also expressed alarm and said they had not been consulted before construction began.
"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Adhamiya," Ahmed al-Dulaimi told the Associated Press news agency.
"We are in our fourth year of occupation and we are seeing the number of blast walls increasing day after day," he said.
US and Iraqi troops have long built cement barriers around key locations in Baghdad and other cities to prevent attacks, especially suicide car bombings.
But no-one claims that such barriers and walls are protection in themselves, correspondents say.
Iraq has been in the grip of raging sectarian violence since the bombing of an important Shia shrine in Samarra in February 2006.
Now read this and compare*:
A senior Nationalist politician has condemned a British military project to build a concrete wall around a catholic enclave in the Northern Irish capital, Belfast.
UK forces say the wall, which will separate Short Strand from nearby protestant districts, aims to prevent sectarian violence between the two communities.
But Gerry Fitt, who heads the biggest catholic bloc in parliament, says it will breed yet more strife.
Some Short Strand residents have said the wall will make their district a prison.
Short Strand lies on the mainly protestant east bank of the Lagan river and violence regularly flares between the enclave and nearby protestant areas.
Construction of the 5km (three-mile) concrete wall began on 10 April and the British military says it hopes to complete the project by the end of the month.
Once the 3.6m (12 ft) wall is finished, people will enter and leave Short Strand through a small number of checkpoints guarded by UK forces.
The British army says the barrier is the centrepiece of its strategy to end sectarian violence in the area but insists there are no plans to divide up the whole city into gated communities.
Catholic Archbishop William Conway said the wall was a disaster.
Speaking to an Irish news agency, he said it would separate Short Strand from the rest of Belfast and help breed further violence.
'Maze of walls'
Some Short Strand residents said the wall would harden the capital's already bitter sectarian divide.
"Erecting concrete walls between neighbourhoods is not a solution to the collapse in security and the rampant violence," housewife Mary Taggart told the AFP news agency.
"If so, Belfast residents would find themselves in a maze of high walls overnight, " she said.
"I resent the barrier. It will make Short Strand a big prison," another resident, Kevin, said.
Other residents also expressed alarm and said they had not been consulted before construction began.
"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Short Strand," Sean Keevey told the Associated Press news agency.
"We are in our fourth year of violence and we are seeing the number of blast walls increasing day after day," he said.
British troops have long built cement barriers around key locations in Belfast and other cities to prevent attacks, especially car bombings.
But no-one claims that such barriers and walls are protection in themselves, correspondents say.
Northern Ireland has been in the grip of raging sectarian violence since the death of 13 civilians in a civil rights march in Londonderry in 1969.
And remember that the violence continued for 20 years, and Belfast did indeed become a "maze of walls" in some areas. Didn't help much.
Why can't they learn from the mistakes other people already made? (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_line)
*some facts and years not particularly right, mainly to do with the year the Short Strand peace line was erected and its length, but the general point still stands